Background
Charles Kiesler was born on August 14, 1934, in Saint Louis, Missouri.
220 Trowbridge Rd, East Lansing, MI 48824, United States
Charles Kiesler studied at Michigan State University. He got a Master of Arts.
450 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA 94305, United States
Charles Kiesler studied at Stanford University. He got a Doctor of Philosophy.
Charles Kiesler
(It is suggested that people worry about potentially negat...)
It is suggested that people worry about potentially negative implications of attitudinally explicit behavior, especially when their commitment or perceived responsibility for the behavior is high.
https://www.amazon.com/Psychology-Commitment-Experiments-Behavior-Monographs/dp/0124064507
1971
(Mental Hospitalization is the most thorough and integrate...)
Mental Hospitalization is the most thorough and integrated analysis yet attempted of data on hospitalization for mental disorders.
https://www.amazon.com/Mental-Hospitalization-Myths-National-Crisis/dp/0803928785
1987
(This book is a research monograph reporting empirical res...)
This book is a research monograph reporting empirical results, but we have tried to place the data in a very broad national perspective. The book gives a broad perspective of mental disorders and mental disorder treatment in general hospitals in the United States.
https://www.amazon.com/Unnoticed-Majority-Psychiatric-Inpatient-Springer/dp/0306443635
1993
Charles Kiesler was born on August 14, 1934, in Saint Louis, Missouri.
Charles Kiesler studied at Michigan State University, where he received his Master of Arts in 1960 and Stanford University, where he earned his Doctor of Philosophy in 1963.
After graduating, Charles Kiesler worked briefly as an assistant professor at Ohio State University in 1963-1964 before joining Yale University, where he taught until 1970. During the early 1970s, Charles was a professor of psychology and chairman of the department at the University of Kansas. Then, for the remainder of the decade, in 1975-1979, he was executive director of the American Psychological Association, where he credited with resolving the organization's financial crisis.
Joining Carnegie-Mellon University in 1979, Charles Kiesler was a psychology professor and then head of the department until 1983, when he became dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences from 1983 to 1985. His administrative talents were put to use again in 1992 when he became chancellor at the University of Missouri. The university was suffering from low enrollment at the time, and Charles turned the institution around by offering student tuition incentives, especially to minority students. He increased the number of black students by fifty-seven percent during his tenure, before arguments with the board of curators led to his removal in 1996.
Charles Kiesler was also the founder and the president of the American Psychological Society (now the Association for Psychological Science) in 1988. Besides, he was a writer. Charles was the author of several books, including The Psychology of Commitment: Experiments, Mental Hospitalization: Myths and Facts about a National Crisis, and The Unnoticed Majority in Psychiatric Inpatient Care.
(It is suggested that people worry about potentially negat...)
1971(This book is a research monograph reporting empirical res...)
1993(Mental Hospitalization is the most thorough and integrate...)
1987
Charles Kiesler married Tern Morton on February 28, 1987. They had a son, Hugo.